Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Indian - Private Equity Route To Resurgence PDF
Indian - Private Equity Route To Resurgence PDF
Route to Resurgence
Authored by:
Vivek Pandit
Toshan Tamhane
Rohit Kapur
ii
Indian Private Equity:
Route to Resurgence
Acknowledgements
We would like to acknowledge the contributions of several individuals and institutions
that provided valuable input and guidance on this report. The India Venture Capital
Association (IVCA) team, including Arvind Mathur, Akriti Bamniyal and Angad Dugal
opened access to several private sources of information that proved critical to several
aspects of the research. The IVCA executive committee, including Sanjay Nayar, Niten
Malhan, Gopal Srinivasan, Satish Madhana, Padmanabh Sinha, Vishakha Mulye, Bharat
Banka, Ashley Menezes and Bejul Somaia, shared valuable perspectives during multiple
interviews and constructively challenged our findings. Aswath Rau, Ganesh Rao and
Pallabi Ghosal from Amarchand Mangaldas; Siddharth Shah from Khaitan & Co.; Rajesh
Simhan from Nishith Desai and Vivek Chandy from JS Law provided legal perspectives
on key regulatory issues. The teams at KPMG (Puneet Shah and Sheetal Nagle) and
PricewaterhouseCooper (Gautam Mehra and Vikram Bohra) provided valued input on
tax matters. Several McKinsey experts, including Alok Kshirsagar, Anu Madgavkar,
Souvik Chakraborty, Yashashvi Takalapalli and Udit Anand, provided direct guidance
on our research, ensuring robustness of sources, analyses and methodologies used.
The McKinsey editorial team, including Ellie Kiloh, Christian Johnson, Vineeta Rai and
Punita Singh, and our editorial consultant, Roger Malone, offered editorial support and
compliance review, considerably improving the cogency and clarity of our findings.
The McKinsey media and design teams, including Natasha Wig, Fatema Nulwalla, Ava
Sethna, McKinsey Visual Aids and New Media Australia, supported critical design,
dissemination and all aspects of report production.
iv
Contents
Preface1
Executive summary 2
Chapter 1: ImpactonIndiasEconomy 7
Impact on the Indian economy 7
Impact on portfolio companies 9
Chapter 2: PerformanceinIndia 15
Factors contributing to lower realised returns 15
Chapter 3: TheRouteAhead 25
Learning from experience of the 2001-14 era 26
Need for a supportive regulatory framework 28
Private equity in India has witnessed euphoric highs and frustrating lows since the start
of the millennium. As it sets a course for the future, the industry has a chance to reclaim
a position as a vibrant contributor to the nations economy, but it must be guided by the
lessons gained from its experiences.
Backed by significant reserves of primarily foreign capital, the private equity industry
contributed substantially to the Indias growth story, investing more than $100 billion into
more than 3,100 companies between 2001 and 2014. With strong economic growth,
the private equity industry in India, on an average, realised gross returns of 21 percent
up to 2007, but following the global economic crisis of 2008, the environment changed.
After 2007, returns at exit dropped to 7 percent, well below capital market benchmarks1,
fundraising stalled and exit options became scarce. Adding to the trouble, financial market
regulations became more focused on shareholder protection and tax gaps, with spill-over
effects on the private equity industry.
As signs now point toward renewed economic strength in India, the time is right to
reflect on the lessons of the past and consider the future. To contribute to the dialogue,
McKinsey&Company took a detailed look at Indias private equity industry and its impact
on the country. The effort included extensive data analytics, which accessed prominent
industry databases and our own proprietary knowledge, supplemented by a comprehensive
survey of stakeholders, including about 40 private equity managers, 22 limited partners
and more than 40 executives at portfolio companies. Officials with Ministry of Finance,
Securities and Exchange Board of India, Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority
and Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority were alsocanvassed.
This report synthesises the key insights collected from our study and offers a view of the
route ahead. Chapter 1 discusses the impact of private equity on the Indian economy since
2001, Chapter 2 examines the industrys performance between 2001 and 2014 and factors
that influenced it, and Chapter 3 outlines a framework for reinvigorating Indias private equity
industry, focusing on lessons from the past and potential avenues of growth, including a
rethink of the regulatory framework.
The private equity industry in India has a real chance to contribute again to the countrys
overall economic development, offering benefits to multiple stakeholders. Choices made
over the next few years can forge a route to resurgence.
Private equity in India as an asset class has evolved significantly over the past two
decades. Starting in the late 1990s, private equity provided an alternative source of
financing for local businesses accustomed to limited credit options from banks or turning
to public equity markets to underwrite their growth ambitions. Today, the asset class is
accepted more readily by Indian entrepreneurs as a source of strategic capital that can
play a transformational role in the growth of their businesses by bringing in required new
capabilities and discipline unavailable from other forms of capital.
Over the past 20 years, the industry has been a relatively stable source of capital despite
many challenges, including gaining acceptance, navigating the recent weak economy,
performance setbacks, and a complex regulatory environment. The industry has learned
from its experience, and today it better understands the nuances of working effectively in the
local environment. As the general economic sentiment in India turns positive, the countrys
private equity industry has a real opportunity to regain its past vibrancy and move towards
making an even greater impact on the economy.
In addition to providing stable capital, private equity has also offered strategic capital,
especially by helping their portfolio companies strengthen internal capabilities. Several relevant
metrics reflect the improvements that appear to be enabled by private equity involvement.
The link may be a selection bias, with private equity investors tending towards businesses that
are better run and have stronger prospects than others. Still, the correlation between private
equity ownership and superior performance and skills compared to businesses not backed by
equity back companies even while controlling for sectors is compelling:
Stronger job creation record. In the five years following initial investment, companies
backed by private equity grew direct employment faster than companies not backed by
private equity in a comparable period. This correlation holds true in aggregate and at a
sector level.
Superior financial performance. Also in the two years following initial investment,
revenues of private equity portfolio companies grew 28 percent more than revenues of
companies not backed by private equity in a comparable period. In addition, profits were
stronger. This holds true in aggregate and within each sector.
Greater export earnings. Portfolio companies increased their export earnings much
faster than companies not backed by private equity in aggregate and across all sectors.
Beyond the natural and partial hedge export oriented sectors offer against currency risk
for investors, export sales capabilities appear to support this correlation.
2
More acquisitive and global. In our sample set, 80 percent of the companies
participated in their first cross-border merger and acquisition (M&A) only after receiving
private equity funding. Once again, the correlation holds in aggregate and by sector,
suggesting new M&A capabilities are being forged.
Performance in India
Despite the positive impact on the Indian economy, returns generated by private equity
investors have been mixed. Until 2007, average realised gross returns from private equity
exits were 21 percent, but this dropped to 7 percent in later years. Several factors
contributed to the shift, including a sharply deteriorating macroeconomic environment, a
challenging investment ecosystem and substantial capital raised during this period. The
average holding period for investments increased from an average of 3.1 years between
2001 and 2007 to 4.4 years during 2008 to 2013. Furthermore, as exit options became more
limited, only a quarter of the $51 billion invested between 2000 and 2008 has been returned
to investors to date, on a cost basis.
Competition for a small pool of assets. Quality assets suitable for investment were
limited in India and came with high levels of intermediation, forcing investors to pay
richervaluations.
Narrower exit options. About 32 percent of private equity capital invested in India
between 2000 and 2008 has exited, leaving $75 billion still under investment. Following
the global financial crisis, public markets became extremely selective and, with
increased regulatory uncertainty, strategic interest in Indian businesses dried up. Deals
with other private equity firms emerged as a more popular exit option, accounting for
more than 30 percent of all exits by value in 2013.
Private equity managers, investors and executives at portfolio companies are already taking
steps in this direction by employing the lessons learned in recent years. Private equity
firms are refining their investment strategies, focusing on high-quality entrepreneurs and
capturing greater levels of influence and control. They are also becoming more rigorous in
valuation and risk assessment. At the same time, limited partners, investors in private equity
firms, are choosing private equity firms more carefully, looking for deep local expertise and
team stability. Entrepreneurs have also started recognising private equity firms as strategic
partners that can contribute to enhancing corporate capabilities.
Along with the shifts in approach among key stakeholders, an enabling regulatory
framework is needed to ensure the continued growth of the industry. While most regulatory
efforts have rightly focused on protecting minority shareholder interests and improving
compliance, there has been limited direct regulatory effort focused on the private equity
industry itself. Private equity as an asset class will need recognition as a distinct investment
class, much the same way as investments from foreign institutional investors and foreign
direct investment are recognized as carrying unique attributes.
While the last few months (including the Union Budget 2015) have seen developments
on many policy fronts, there are four areas where regulations could further help forge a
resurgent path ahead for the industry. First, mobilising greater domestic institutional capital
for private equity will require existing allocation ceilings to be shifted for certain types of
investors. Second, it will be critical to create an enabling environment for overseas investors
by removing practical impediments related to withholding taxes and safe harbour norms for
advisors to overseas investors. Third, simplifying delisting norms for closely held companies
and defining a robust court receivership process will expand the investible universe available
for investors. And last, providing a more certain and robust securities and tax regime will
help private equity investors exit in a timely manner.
4
After several challenging years, the private equity industry in India can take advantage of
newfound economic optimism and a record of impact on portfolio companies to chart a
route to resurgence. Change in strategies of private equity firms and their investors, as well
entrepreneurs and executives at portfolio companies, point towards a stronger industry that
can offer significant contributions to the Indian economy. To reach this potential, challenges
must overcome through cooperation and continued dialogue among industry players,
regulators and industry associations.
Exhibit 1.1: Private equity is a stable source of equity capital, contributing over USD 103 bn
since 2001
USD bn
Real GDP FII net equity inflows Other equity issuances2
growth rate1 Private Equity IPO
40
30
20
10
-10
-20
2001 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 2014
5.4 3.9 8.0 7.1 9.5 9.6 9.3 6.7 8.6 8.9 6.7 4.5 4.7 5.53
1 GDP growth rate at factor cost (2004-05 base year) for corresponding fiscal year (e.g. 2014 refers to FY 2015)
2 Includes follow on offers, convertible bonds
3 CSO estimate
SOURCE: SEBI; Central Statistics Office (MOSPI); Dealogic; AVCJ Research; VCCEdge; McKinsey analysis
2 Total private equity investments in India from 2001 to 2014, AVCJ Research and VCCEdge.
3 Central Statistics Office (Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation).
4 The average beta of MSCI India index against S&P 500 Index increased from 0.3 to 1.1 between 2001 and
2013, Thomson Reuters Datastream.
Exhibit 1.2: PE supported telecom services and tower operators account for a significantly
large share of the overall market
1 2013 figure; PE backed sample comprises of 4 companies for mobile telecom services, and 7 companies for mobile telecom equipment
SOURCE: AVCJ Research; VCCEdge; CMIE Prowess; TRAI; company filings; IBEF; press articles; McKinsey analysis
Exhibit 1.3: Private equity contributes towards the development of companies of all sizes, in
particular early stage to mid corporate
Value of PE Volume of PE
Turnover # companies in the investments investments
Categories USD mn1 organized sector %, 2001-13 %, 2001-13
SME 2 - 25 ~100,000 11 12
Very large
500+ 250 30 5
corporate
1 Segmentation of turnover categories done in INR, and exchange rate of 1 USD = 50 INR used for representation purposes
SOURCE: CMIE Prowess; expert interviews; AVCJ Research; VCCEdge; McKinsey analysis
5 Companies back by private equity were identified from transactions data from AVCJ Research and
VCCEdge.
8
Also, private equity appears to accelerate job growth through its portfolio companies
(Exhibit 1.4). Between 2001 and 2013, the number of jobs at companies backed by private
equity posted a compounded annual growth rate on average of almost 9 percent during the
first five years after investment. The annual growth rate at comparable companies without
private equity funds was just under 3 percent.
Exhibit 1.4: PE investments help accelerate employment when compared to non-PE backed
companies
155
152
150 8.7%
145
139
140
135
129
130
125
119
120
115
115 2.9%
112
110 108
105 104
105 102
100
100
t t+1 t+2 t+3 t+4 t+5
Years since PE investment
1 PE backed sample consists of 52 companies that saw PE investments between 2003 and 2007 while non-PE backed sample of companies consists
of 171 private sector companies.
2 Analysis uses employment data from FY04 to FY 13 to compare job growth in PE backed companies over a 5 year period after PE investment with
growth of non-PE backed companies over the same period
6 Comparison of revenue and EBITDA growth between comparable set of PE-backed and non-PE backed
companies for a period of 2 years following PE investment; S&P Capital IQ, AVCJ Research.
188 182
174
161
140 137 131 140 144
125 127 117 124 120
2007 08 09 10 11 12 2013
Year of investment
1 PE-backed company sample is based on 200 PE investments in listed companies between FY 07-15
2 Sample of non-PE backed companies consists of 1075 comparable listed companies for FY 07-15
192 197
174
159 151
138 128 131 132
122 116 113 119
108
2007 08 09 10 11 12 2013
Year of investment
1 PE-backed company sample is based on 200 PE investments in listed companies between FY 07-15
2 Sample of non-PE backed companies consists of 1075 comparable listed companies for FY 07-15
In many instances, private equity investors focused on building capabilities in their portfolio
companies, notably evidenced in export growth and cross-border mergers and acquisitions
(M&A). Often private equity investors brought their own expertise in international markets to
these companies and in several instances eased access to foreign customers in an effort
to drive export growth. As a result, export income in portfolio companies appears to grow
much faster than that of their peers (Exhibit 1.7)7. The strategy supported growth at portfolio
companies and helped reduce risks associated with domestic growth volatility and currency
rate changes.
10
Exhibit 1.7: PE investors facilitated more aggressive export growth
FY 06-09 average
Average export income FY 10-13 average
USD mn1, FY 06-09, FY 10-13 x% Growth %
110 117
IT/ITES 254% 88%
222 167
38 44
Consumer Goods 199% 99%
115 89
37 35
Automobiles and Components 107% 54%
77 54
77 42
Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology 91% 94%
148 82
62 44
Metals, Mining and Materials 61% 29%
99 57
30 24
Machinery and Industrial Goods 25% 52%
38 36
66 51
Total 136% 72%
156 87
1 Exchange rate of 1 USD = 50 INR used
2 Sample of 120 PE-backed companies from 6 export focused sectors that received PE investments between 2000 and 2014. Energy and utilities, a
major export sector was excluded due to very small constituent sample for PE backed companies (n < 5)
SOURCE: CMIE Prowess; AVCJ Research; VCCEdge; McKinsey analysis
Significantly, among the portfolio companies that engaged in cross-border M&A, about
80 percent completed their first cross-border M&A deal only after the initial private equity
investment. Private equity firms contributed their experience, proprietary knowledge and
networks to help these companies find and obtain appropriate strategic partners.
Analysis also shows that, in addition to accelerated earnings growth, companies with private
equity funding appear to be more diligent in ensuring good corporate governance. Among
companies with revenues of less than 7.5 billion rupees (about $125 million), those backed
by private equity accounted for 3.7 percent of companies and 13.1 percent of corporate
revenues in fiscal 2014 in India, yet they contributed 18.8 percent of total corporate tax
collections9 (Exhibit 1.9). The consistent and increasing tax contribution trend is supported
by private equity-backed companies that achieve scale and higher profits.
8 Cross-border M&A activity of PE-backed companies and non-PE backed companies between 2001 and
2013 was analyzed. Out of 2,849 PE-backed companies, 126 companies undertook cross-border M&A, of
which 100 did it for the first time after PE investment. The sample of non-PE backed companies comprised
26,564 companies, of which 583 undertook cross border M&A. M&A data, AVCJ Research.
9 Tax contribution data for companies backed by private equity, CMIE Prowess and VCCEdge.
1 Includes energy and utilities, financial services, real estate, media and entertainment, telecommunications, business services and other misc. sectors
2 Sample of 126 PE-backed companies that did cross border M&A between 2001 and 2013
3 Sample of 584 non-PE backed companies that did cross border M&A between 2001 and 2013
SOURCE: AVCJ; CMIE Prowess; McKinsey analysis
18.8
16.0
12.7
3.2 3.7
1.7 2.3
0.3 0.6 0.6
FY 02 FY 05 FY 08 FY 11 FY 14
1 Sample of 717 PE-invested companies (~25% of PE backed companies) with revenue < `750 crore. In FY 2014, total tax contribution for this sample
was ~INR 29 billion
2 Total sample refers to 19,195 companies with revenue < `7.5 billion
SOURCE: CMIE Prowess; AVCJ Research; VCCEdge; McKinsey analysis
12
When investing in a company, private equity firms often introduce specific measures
to improve corporate governance processes, such as establishing independent audit
committees and compensation committees. Portfolio companies are also generally
encouraged to maintain lower loan default rates and show better credit discipline. From a
practical perspective, such governance initiatives benefit private equity firms by making their
portfolio companies better candidates to be listed on capital markets and more attractive to
potential acquirers.
As private equity gains greater acceptance in India and its benefits are more broadly
recognized, the industry will likely continue to play a major role in building private sector
capabilities and Indias economic development.
This disproportionately large flow of capital was forced toward a relatively small pool of quality,
investment-grade private assets and business owners. While it is widely accepted that India is
an entrepreneurial economy and it has many early-stage investment options (companies with
annual revenues of less than $2 million), growth-stage investment options (companies with
revenues of $2 million to $500 million) the segment of most interest to private equity firms
are far fewer when compared to other emerging markets (Exhibit 2.1). This might be because
in India, companies have historically had easier access to public listings, so fewer companies
have remained private and available for private equity investment. India, for example, has about
2,600listed companies with annual revenues of less than $125 million compared to about
1,000such companies in China12. The countrys preponderance of smaller unlisted companies is
reflected in the median revenues of public companies: $20 million in 2013 in India, compared to
$140 million in China, $490 million in Brazil and $950 million in Russia.
10 Based on gross IRR returns by investment year, calculated from 610 exits between 1998 and 2013
aggregated from Preqin database, AVCJ Research, VCCEdge.
11 PE investments data, AVCJ Research, VCCEdge. GDP data, IHS Global Insight World Market
Monitordatabase.
12 S&P Capital IQ database.
Brazil 660,000
415,500
1,235 750 545
Turnover buckets < USD 2mn USD 2-25 mn USD 25-125 mn USD 125-500 mn > USD 500 mn
(Early stage) (SME) (Mid corp) (Large corp) (Super Large)
1 Total companies excluding those which are PSUs/Government or are public companies or belong to unorganized sector
SOURCE: Rosstat; OneSource; IFC SME database; expert interviews; Press search; McKinsey analysis
Also between 2007 and 2014, the number of private equity firms active in India more than
doubled, climbing from 65 to 137, with many of the new funds established with limited
experience in investing. In several cases, the mismatch of demand for investment-grade
assets and the available supply of capital led to inflated valuations.
Valuations were also pushed higher in India by a heavy reliance on intermediaries, who
work with entrepreneurs to secure funding. These intermediaries, paid a percentage of a
transactions value, benefit from higher valuations. In a market with fewer quality assets and
an abundance of capital to be invested, they can agitate competition to drive valuations to
unwarranted levels. India is a rare market in which private companies often command a
premium over similar public companies. Several private equity managers mentioned during
our research that asking prices for companies was up to 30 percent higher than their own
valuations during discussions with targeted companies. Private equity investors responded
by negotiating structured deals with downside protection clauses and put options, but these
structures often led to misalignment among stakeholders, broken agreements and poorer
returns for the private equity firm.
16
middle-class households in 2007, its urban population had grown from 300 million in 2001
to 351 million in 200714 and the labour force participation rate was nearing 60 percent15.
After 2008, a series of macroeconomic factors pummelled Indias private equity industry,
cutting realized returns dramatically. Up until 2007, average gross returns to private equity
investors were 21 percent, compared to an average of 18 percent for public market
returns16. After 2008, average returns dropped to 7 percent when exiting investments, while
public market returns dropped to 11 percent.
As seen in many countries, Indias growth slowed dramatically after 2008, unsettling several
sectors and the markets generally. GDP fell from an average annual rate of 9.5 percent
between 2005 and 2008 to around 6.7 percent between 2008 and 2013, bolstered by a
brief rebound in 2010. Also since 2008, actual economic growth repeatedly fell short of
expectations, signalling that optimistic outlooks were suspect (Exhibit 2.2)17.
Exhibit 2.2: India GDP growth fell short of expectations after several years of exceeding them
11%
10%
9%
8%
7%
6%
5%
4%
3%
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Beyond the global crisis, other macroeconomic factors contributed to the sharp drop in realised
returns. Encouraged by the positive business sentiment leading into 2008, private equity
firms had begun investing larger amounts, in aggregate and per deal, into sectors that would
potentially benefit most from the countrys efforts to improve its infrastructure. Industries included
real estate development, hospitals, roads and power stations, which were capital intensive and
Such companies appealed to private equity managers trying to meet increased expectations of
their investors. As inflation and market volatility increased in India, investors began demanding
higher risk premiums from their private equity investments (Exhibit 2.3). Credit rating downgrades
for Indian debt between 2009 and 2013 and policy delays only exacerbated the situation.
Exhibit 2.3: Inflation, volatility and equity risk premium increased significantly
Volatility Average beta of MSCI India index benchmarked against S&P 500 Index
1.1
0.7
0.3
Inflation Inflation,
Percent
6.0% 7.0%
4.8%
8.4% 8.9%
3.3%
1 Equity risk premium is the product of 1) the average spread of yield between 10 yr GOI bonds and 10 yr US Treasury bonds over a period of 4 years
(normalized country default spread) and 2) the relative deviation of equity market over the India bond market for the same time period
By 2013, all of the 25 largest private equity firms in India had at least one infrastructure investment
in their portfolio, and altogether this type of asset represented 43 percent of the $77 billion
private equity firms invested in India between 2007 and 201318. Beyond specific sectors, this
excessive optimism also led to about 75 percent of new investments being made at valuations
higher than the median for the previous 15 years (Exhibit 2.4). By contrast, Chinese investors
invested about 50 per cent above its 15-year median P/E ratio of 9.8. One effect was that exits
could not support these valuations and became difficult.
After 2008, however, more greenfield investments emerged, macroeconomics and government
policy delays worked against these companies, and returns dropped precipitously (Exhibit 2.5).
Moreover, with higher inflation, while revenues grew for all sectors, profits did not grow at the
same rate as revenue, dampening valuations (Exhibit 2.6).
The change affected private equity returns, as well as investor sentiment toward India. Between
2001 and 2008, private equity firms raised about $65 billion for investing in India, but from 2009
to 2013 fundraising dwindled to about $29 billion.
18 Based on VCCEdge, AVCJ Research data on PE firms and their portfolio mix.
18
Exhibit 2.4: In last 15 years, ~75% of PE investments in India were made when market traded
above the median
Price/Earnings ratio1 PE investments around valuation peaks
Healthcare providers3 2% 6% 10 9 0%
Business and consumer
3% 6% 12 14 +1%
services
Telecommunications 14% 6% 10 7 -4%
SOURCE: AVCJ Research; VCCEdge; Preqin; McKinsey Corporate Performance Analysis Tool; CMIE Prowess
1 Based on filings available with CMIE Prowess for companies with total revenue > INR 1 crore
2 Also includes related equipment
3 Includes consumer products, food and beverages, retail, leisure and textile
4 Includes business and consumer services, healthcare providers and equipment, machinery and industrial goods, media and entertainment, metals,
mining and materials, pharmaceuticals and biotechnology
A sharp weakening of the Indian rupee on foreign exchange markets also cut into dollar-
based returns realized by private equity firms. One US dollar traded at about 44 rupees in
2008 and at about 59 rupees in 2013 (Exhibit 2.7). While rupee-based returns when exiting
investments in 2013 were 14 percent, dollar-based returns were 8 percent.
45%
40
38%
55 53.6
30
25%
50 48.6
20 47.0
19%
10% 45.3
10 45 45.8
8% 44.0
0% 41.3
0
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013
Exit year Exit year
1 Gross dollar IRR estimated for a sample of ~610 exits between 2000-2013
20
3. Narrower exit options
The changing environment also restricted the options available for private equity investors to
exit investments at the end of their intended investment periods. Unfavourable capital market
conditions ruled out public offerings, and global strategic interest in Indian assets was low
due to stressed conditions in the developed markets amongst other factors, making direct
sales difficult. In addition, projects by capital-intensive portfolio companies were often behind
schedule, delaying any prospect for a reasonably profitable exit.
Between 2001 and 2007, private equity firms held investments in India for an average of
3.1years, and, from 2008 to 2013, the average holding period for exited investments jumped
to 4.4 years, climbing as high as 5.7 years in 2013 (Exhibit 2.8). Also, while overall private
equity firms had exited from about 32 percent of investments made between 2000 and
2008 on a cost basis (Exhibit 2.9), exits from infrastructure and related industries were much
slower: about 20 percent in engineering and construction, about 15 percent in real estate,
and about 10 percent in and utilities and energy (Exhibit 2.10).
Exhibit 2.8: PE exits are tougher: Returns declined as average holding period increased
45%
40
38% 5 4.8
4.3
30
3.9 4.0
25% 4
20
19%
3.3 3.5
10% 2.9
3
10
8%
0%
0 2
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013
Exit year Exit year
1 Gross dollar IRR estimated for a sample of ~610 exits between 2000-2013
Exhibit 2.10: Exiting investments and realising returns have been difficult
across most sectors
PE investments exited Holding period
PE Investments % of total investments Returns where exited1 of deals exited
2000-2008, USD billion exited, 2000-2013 Per cent 2000-2013
27
1 Gross dollar IRR estimated for a sample of ~610 exits between 2000-2013
2 Also includes related equipment
3 Consumer goods includes consumer products, food and beverages, retail, leisure and textile;
4 Number of exits less than 10
5 Others include metals, mining and materials, pharmaceuticals, automobiles, business and consumer services and media and entertainment
SOURCE: AVCJ Research; VCCEdge; Preqin; McKinsey Corporate Performance Analysis Tool; and Prowess
Further, the texture of exit options changed. From 2002 to 2008, sales to strategic investors
accounted for about half of the portfolio exits for private equity in India, with IPOs and other
market options accounting for 31 percent. Both options lost ground after 2008 as potential
investors became unwilling to commit to mid-sized growth companies (Exhibit 2.11). Regulatory
restrictions on overseas listings and share lock-in periods added further challenges. Meanwhile,
while some long-established funds sought exit options, newer ones were deploying more
capital. By 2013, sales to private equity firms accounted for almost a third of portfolio exits, a
greater proportion than any other exit option.
25 39
IPO, Secondary &
20
open market
52
36
27 25 Sale to strategic
4. Limited influence
Another factor contributing to lower returns after 2008 was the limited influence private equity
could exercise on their portfolio companies during a period of high volatility, except in cases of
a few well governed portfolio companies, where minority investing still worked well. The vast
majority of assets held in India by private equity firms were minority stakes 87 percent, based
on number of portfolio companies in deals between 2009 and 201319. This ownership structure
did not have any adverse impact in a vibrant economy, but after 2008, private equity firms were
stifled by their inability to bring their expertise and experience to bear fully and influence the
direction of portfolio companies, given their minority positions. They were called upon for advice
when needed, but had limited scope for direct intervention.
19 AVCJ Research and VCCEdge, covers only deals where stake information available.
Already, the industry is showing signs of greater maturity. For one, it has a greater number
of experienced managers than ever before. For example, the number of private equity
managers who have handled more than one fund more than doubled from 2009 to 2014
(Exhibit 3.1). In addition, more funds are now domiciled in India. In 2014, for instance, the
number of Category II Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs), which includes private equity,
has grown from 45 to 61 and the funds invested rose from about $270 million to about
$730million.
Exhibit 3.1: Industry showing signs of maturity with increasing fund manager experience and
several first time funds becoming inactive
xx Funds raised in USD bn
Experienced funds
Fund activity for India located funds out-number first
# of funds, USD mn raised time funds 137
131
122
Large amounts of
40 Inactive
capital raised by first 107 36
time funds 32
98
84 34
76 30 First fund
43 raised
65 28 46
21 44 & active
10
51 36
38
39 12
31 27 32
12 Second or
23 49 54 more funds
13 46
37 raised & active
24 28 24 30
14 16
2005 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 2014
4.3 5.2 7.7 7.4 1.8 3.2 4.1 3.4 4.2 1.7
Exhibit 3.2: GPs plan to tighten entry valuation, while maintaining focus on promoter quality
and increasing control
Longer holding
16%
periods
1 9 of the 40 respondents were venture capital funds and their responses were excluded
A second lesson highlighted by our survey was that private equity managers increasingly
want to structure deals that offer controlling or significant stakes. They want to enhance
their influence over strategic decisions, corporate governance, capital discipline and
planning for an IPO or strategic sale. Finally, managers said they must tighten their valuation
26
methodologies and risk-assessment capabilities to account for various uncertainties in the
Indian market, including regulatory shifts and the difficulties of enforcing contracts.
Exhibit 3.3: LPs also plan to over-invest in identifying the right GP with
deep local knowledge and right investment theses for India
Factor in currency
32%
exposure
Base your return expectation with a 15-20% currency diminution
Invest in smaller
32%
funds by size
Fund size has been the enemy of performance
Others 9%
Other reasons mentioned: High entry valuations, Cyclical
market conditions, India doesnt yet have large cap exits etc.
Armed with co-investment rights, investors are also developing individual investment
theses, which guide their fund allocation decisions and manager selection. Amongst the
various themes expressed were preferences for dollar-denominated funds, smaller funds
and sector-focused funds. Conversely, there is hesitation towards certain sectors, such
as civil construction, because of issues like high frictional cost of dealing with clearances,
uncertainty arising from shifting regulations, delays in project timing or availability of
concessions and an inability to protect underlying project cash flows.
However, despite the underperformance of the past, most foreign investors said they
remained committed to investing in India, with the vast majority saying they would retain or
increase their funding allocation to India (Exhibit 3.4). About two-fifths of the investors we
interviewed have been active in India for at least a decade and continue to take a longer-
term view of Indias potential.
45% 61%
41%
33%
9%
5% 6%
Signi- Marginally At par Marginally Signi- Increase No Reduce
ficantly better poorer ficantly allocation2 change allocation
better poorer
Industry leaders have been in conversations with regulators to address some of these
concerns and progress has been made recently, including in the Union Budget (Finance Bill
2015) presented by the finance minister in parliament, which contained positive overtures to
private equity investors. Specifically, the government has proposed to defer the introduction
of GAAR provisions to the Income Tax Act until April 1, 2017, allow pass-through status to all
Category I and II AIF vehicles and introduce safe harbour norms for offshore funds.
28
identified by industry leaders and other stakeholders, including foreign and domestic private
equity managers, foreign and domestic limited partners, legal counsels and advisors. Acting
on these suggestions could help the industry blaze a resurgent path forward. They include:
92 31%
South Korea
Japan 74
15% 15%
China 65
4%
India 15-20
1 Contribution calculated based on known fund commitments by domestic LPs to total known fund commitments attributable to all LPs for each
country
2 Of the 40 survey responses, 14 responses excluded as those GPs do not raise country specific funds/cannot access domestic LPs
Further, there are additional restrictions on how much most domestic institutions can
commit to any single alternative investment fund vehicle based on the size of assets being
managed. While some of these restrictions may have once been appropriate given the
inherent risks in the asset class and lack of understanding, today there are domestic
Exhibit 3.6: Typical sources of capital for private equity are marginally tapped in India
572.0
114.4 112.7
Banks 1.7
UHNIs1
1 Ultra high net worth individuals, defined as persons with assets greater than INR 25 crore
The recent amendments to the Income Tax Act that allow for pass-through on all income
other than business income for Category I and II AIFs have removed some of the structural
challenges that collective investment vehicles have had in raising domestic capital efficiently.
However the characterisation of income for AIFs as business income and capital gains
introduces the potential for litigation in the future.
Domestic investors currently also have limited access to accurate information about the
performance of the private equity industry, which limits their ability to objectively assess its
attractiveness as part of their portfolio allocation process. Making information about the
industrys performance more easily available through neutral gatekeepers will help resolve
this gap.
However, a few aspects of the overall framework continue to limit its effectiveness. For
example, the introduction of safe harbour norms for offshore funds establishes the intent
to allow professionals to work effectively from India, but once the qualifying conditions
are considered, most funds operating in India would be ineligible to benefit from such
30
norms. Similarly, while the pass-through benefit has been given to investors in collective
fund vehicles, the withholding tax of 10 percent makes it cumbersome for global pension
funds, which are major investors into private equity, since they enjoy tax-free status in most
countries.
Undoubtedly, public and private stakeholders recognise, understand and appreciate these
issues, and many efforts are underway to resolve them appropriately. Accelerating these
efforts amid an improving external environment will provide a major boost to the industry just
as it rejoins its journey towards a long-term sustainable model.
* * *
After several challenging years, the private equity industry in India can take advantage of
the newfound economic optimism, a record of impact on portfolio companies and chart
a route to resurgence. Changes in the strategies and mindset of private equity firms and
their investors, as well as those of entrepreneurs and executives at portfolio companies,
point towards a stronger industry that can again offer significant contributions to the Indian
economy. To reach this potential, challenges must be overcome through cooperation and
continued dialogue amongst investors, regulators and industry associations.
Vivek Pandit is a Senior Partner with McKinseys Mumbai office and leads McKinseys
Principal Investment practice across Asia. He has worked in offices across North America,
Europe and Asia. He serves the worlds leading investors and shareholders on investment
strategy, governance, origination, transformations and exits. Among shareholders, Vivek
serves family-owned businesses, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and private equity
funds. He also has a focus on telecom, media and technology firms advising them on
strategy, rapid business building and operations. He has authored and co-authored several
publications, including a recent article titled: Private Equity in India: Once overestimated,
now underserved (Feb 2015).
Vivek_Pandit@mckinsey.com
Toshan Tamhane is a Partner with McKinseys Mumbai office. He leads McKinseys Private
Equity Practice in India. He helps major buy-side sponsors make investments across asset
classes and create value through portfolio improvement and governance. He has deep
expertise in areas like transaction structuring, cross-border investments, capital allocation,
thematic investing and portfolio transformation. Toshan also co-leads McKinseys Financial
Services Practice in India and works with banks, insurance companies & asset managers on
topics of strategy & operations.
Toshan_Tamhane@mckinsey.com
Rohit Kapur is a Client Director with McKinseys Mumbai office. He serves investor
clients in South Asia across the investment life cycle on investment strategy, origination,
commercial due diligence, transformations, and exit preparation work. He has 25 years of
broader financial services exposure has served clients across a broad array of industries
and geographies in corporate finance, mergers and acquisitions and raising capital in
both public and private markets. In addition, he has extensive experience in valuations,
negotiations and transaction structuring.
Rohit_Kapur@mckinsey.com
32
Indian Private Equity: Route to Resurgence 33
Private Equity Practice
June 2015
Copyright McKinsey & Company
Design contact: New Media Australia
www.mckinsey.com